Schmid Anna, McAlindon Timothy, Schmid Christopher H, Wang Chenchen
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Tufts Medical Centre, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Int J Integr Med. 2013;1. doi: 10.5772/57137. Epub 2013 Oct 4.
Previous long-term observational studies found that Tai Chi practitioners had better knee-joint proprioceptive acuity versus controls in an older population. We evaluated the effects of Tai Chi for knee-joint proprioception in knee osteoarthritis (OA) in a randomized controlled trial.
We randomized 40 eligible individuals (age > 55, BMI ≤ 40 kg/m with knee pain on most days of the previous month and tibiofemoral OA (K/L grade ≥2) to Tai Chi (10 modified forms from classical Yang style) or to an attention control (stretching and wellness education). The 60 minute intervention sessions occurred twice-weekly for 12 weeks. The knee joint proprioception was measured using a Biometrics™ electrogoniometer with an ADU301 angle display unit during each assessment visit. Three test angles (30, 45 and 60 degrees) were evaluated with each subject in a sitting position taken as neutral (0 degrees). The mean error (absolute angle error) between the actual and replicated angles was calculated for each of the three test angles. The Tai Chi and control groups were compared by intention-to-treat using t-tests.
The participants had a mean age of 65 y (SD 7.8), a mean disease duration of 10 y (SD 7.6), a mean BMI of 30.0 kg/m (SD 4.8), and median K/L grade 4; 75% were female, 70% were white. The participants in the Tai Chi intervention exhibited significantly improved proprioception at 30 degrees, but not at 45 or 60 degrees, at 12 weeks. Patients who continued Tai Chi practice after 12 weeks also reported no significant improvements in knee proprioception at 24 and 48 weeks.
Tai Chi appears to be beneficial for knee proprioception in people with severe knee OA at a 30 degree test angle immediately following 12 weeks of practice. However, we were unable to demonstrate that Tai Chi has any long-term effects on knee proprioception, nor were we able to find any effects on proprioception at larger test angles (45 and 60 degrees). Standardized and reproducible measures for knee proprioception should be explored in future research.
先前的长期观察性研究发现,在老年人群中,太极拳练习者的膝关节本体感觉敏锐度优于对照组。我们在一项随机对照试验中评估了太极拳对膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者膝关节本体感觉的影响。
我们将40名符合条件的个体(年龄>55岁,体重指数≤40kg/m²,前一个月大部分日子有膝关节疼痛且患有胫股关节OA(K/L分级≥2))随机分为太极拳组(10种源自传统杨式太极拳的改良形式)或注意力控制组(伸展运动和健康宣教)。每周进行两次、每次60分钟的干预课程,持续12周。在每次评估访视期间,使用带有ADU301角度显示单元的Biometrics™电子测角仪测量膝关节本体感觉。让每位受试者在坐姿为中立位(0度)的情况下评估三个测试角度(30度、45度和60度)。计算每个测试角度实际角度与复制角度之间的平均误差(绝对角度误差)。采用t检验按意向性分析对太极拳组和对照组进行比较。
参与者的平均年龄为65岁(标准差7.8),平均病程为10年(标准差7.6),平均体重指数为30.0kg/m²(标准差4.8),K/L分级中位数为4级;75%为女性,70%为白人。在12周时,太极拳干预组的参与者在30度时本体感觉有显著改善,但在45度或60度时没有改善。在12周后继续练习太极拳的患者在24周和48周时膝关节本体感觉也没有显著改善。
在练习12周后,太极拳似乎对重度膝关节OA患者在30度测试角度下的膝关节本体感觉有益。然而,我们无法证明太极拳对膝关节本体感觉有任何长期影响,也未发现在更大测试角度(45度和60度)下对本体感觉有任何影响。未来的研究应探索膝关节本体感觉的标准化和可重复测量方法。